The major carotenoids in pigmented extreme halophiles are the hydroxylated C50 red pigments bacterioruberin (major, 84%) and monoanhydrobacterioruberin (minor, 14%). When cells of Halobacterium cutirubrum were grown in the presence of nicotine they accumulated lycopene and bisanhydrobacterioruberin; maximal accumulation (80% lycopene, 20% bisanhydrobacterioruberin) occurred at 3mM nicotine. Removal of nicotine resulted in the reformation of monoanhydrobacterioruberin and bacterioruberin at the expense of lycopene and bisanhydrobacterioruberin. Thus nicotine does not inhibit the addition of the two extra isoprene units plus two hydroxyl groups (at C1 and C1') to a C40 carotenoid skeleton. It does, however, inhibit the hydration steps at C3'' and C3''' that convert bisanhydrobacterioruberin to monoanhydrobacterioruberin and finally bacterioruberin. These results support the view that the C50 carotenoids can be formed from a C40 carotene, lycopene.